Hey folks,
We have a new customer with an Avaya IP office, who about 7 months ago we swapped out a blown up combo card. We swapped in a replacement(IPO 500 ATMU-V2), and last week it blew a transistor in what I believe was the same spot. I took the system off the wall, took a look inside, and can't see any other immediate damage to the motherboard. Power supply looked fine as well(again, this was all just a surface look).
We do have a Panamax surge protector on the line, and the CO lines coming in are via a Rogers(broadband) modem, which is just essentially a coax VoIP modem.
When I arrived on site, the CO lines on the card were green, but all sets were down and no lights on the DS portion of the card. Nothing was plugged into the analog ports.
Here are pictures of the card:
Bottom
Close Up Bottom
Bottom card, top view with top card removed
Top and Front
Anyone have any idea why a system would blow up two cards within the span of 7 months?
We have a new customer with an Avaya IP office, who about 7 months ago we swapped out a blown up combo card. We swapped in a replacement(IPO 500 ATMU-V2), and last week it blew a transistor in what I believe was the same spot. I took the system off the wall, took a look inside, and can't see any other immediate damage to the motherboard. Power supply looked fine as well(again, this was all just a surface look).
We do have a Panamax surge protector on the line, and the CO lines coming in are via a Rogers(broadband) modem, which is just essentially a coax VoIP modem.
When I arrived on site, the CO lines on the card were green, but all sets were down and no lights on the DS portion of the card. Nothing was plugged into the analog ports.
Here are pictures of the card:
Bottom
Close Up Bottom
Bottom card, top view with top card removed
Top and Front
Anyone have any idea why a system would blow up two cards within the span of 7 months?